Surely this is like putting font declarations in your HTML. I know little about gtk theming but would think you would need a strong reason to override your users theme choice. What happens when they have a customised theme that makes all the text double the size? Will your overidden theme still make sense?_________________Will
contribute: community website, screenshots, puplets, wiki, rss

This will call the standard gtk2-theme in Puppy3 which is defined by the file /etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc. My changes for Pburn will override the original, but still use the original settings when not specified in /usr/local/pburn/gtk/gtkrc-UNIQUE. I made the radiobutton look like a flame (relax, it was just for fun). But what I want to do is making radiobutton-text bold and larger, since this is the most important option in the burning process. To prevent large text in preferences-dialog, just reset gtk by running 'export GTK2_RC_FILES=/etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc'

Sigmund
You certainly don't need to justify your design decisions to me I was just curious. I look forward to seeing the result._________________Will
contribute: community website, screenshots, puplets, wiki, rssLast edited by HairyWill on Wed 19 Mar 2008, 06:37; edited 1 time in total

Gtklogfileviewer is using a "TextView" widget.
That has an own, very complicated syntax to use fonts, colours, links, pictures and such.
You might compare that to HTML, but not as easy to set up.
It is somehow like the Gecko engine of Mozilla, an own rendering system, that can not be influenced by standard Gtk-settings.

The font-settings could be set in the sourcecode only.

In main.c around line 300 you see "Courier", here the fontfamily is defined.
Below, there are some colour-definitions.

You cannot post new topics in this forumYou cannot reply to topics in this forumYou cannot edit your posts in this forumYou cannot delete your posts in this forumYou cannot vote in polls in this forumYou cannot attach files in this forumYou can download files in this forum